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Published byJordan Patrick Modified over 9 years ago
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Centennial of the Clark Fork’s Great Flood June 1908 – June 2008
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Once upon a time… The area where the Clark Fork and Blackfoot rivers met (“the confluence”) was called the “place of big bull trout” by local tribes
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American Indian Historic Use
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1850s to 1883, White settlement began to significantly change the region Lt. John Mullan
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Other major developments in Montana industrial expansion 1852-1860 Survey and Construction of Mullan road. 1858-1862 First “big” gold strikes (Gold Creek, Grasshopper Creek, Alder Gulch) 1862 Homestead Act 1864 Gold discovered on Silver Bow Creek Late 1850’s to 1866: Johnny Grant and Conrad Kohrs cattle ranching the Deer Lodge Valley 1877 Copper mining takes hold in Butte 1883 Completion of Northern Pacific Railroad 1889 Montana statehood…”Oro y Plata”
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TIMBER! Industrial Development
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Upstream Industrialization: The Richest Hill on Earth
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MINING ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS Mining – Intense land and water disturbance; waste rock (acid mine drainage) Milling and Processing – Rock crushing; Concentration of metals; TAILINGS Smelting – Airborne contamination; impaired air quality
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Acid Rock Drainage Pyrite + water + air = rust + acid
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How did Butte and Anaconda’s mining affect the health of the Upper Clark Fork?
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Major impacts, Pre-1908 Smelting activities in Butte and Anaconda led to public outcry, resulting in some minor improvements to smelting practices; The “Smoke Wars”: Butte residents and later, Deer Lodge Valley ranchers were filing lawsuits and compiling evidence against the Anaconda Company as early as the 1880s for smelting damages to property and loss of life…because of ACM’s power, nothing became of the suits outside of minimal settlements and taller smokestacks, spreading the contamination further. Tailings and other wastes from Butte and Anaconda were discharged directly into the streams (Silver Bow Creek and Warm Springs Creek), sending contamination downstream on a constant basis; First lawsuits filed against ACM for water-borne damages in 1903, with many to follow.
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What happened in 1908?
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January 1908, Daily Missoulian “…when the last piece of timber is added to the dam it will be in such condition that the highest waters ever known in this vicinity will not affect it in the least.” George Slack, Milltown construction superintendent
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The 1908 Flood in Perspective Heralded as “the worst on record”…estimated 48,000 cfs of water at the Milltown confluence 1912 USGS records began…since the Clark Fork began daily flow records in 1929, the highest peak flow is 27,500 cfs (1975). 2008 Peak flow was on May 21 at 17,800 cfs Current flow as of 3:17 p.m., 6/20/2008 was 10,900 cfs.
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Cfr superfund
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Remediation and Restoration Remediation : (root word: remedy) clean up that reduces threats to human health and the environment within existing law. Superfund, EPA and DEQ. Restoration : (root word: restore) clean up that returns an area to a condition before the damage, in Milltown’s case, “pre-dam” and “pre- mining.” State of Montana vs. ARCO lawsuit; Department of Justice (Natural Resource Damage Program).
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What will Milltown look like? 1930 Aerial photograph of Milltown
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Blackfoot River Clark Fork River Remove Milltown Dam Build a temporary bypass channel for the Clark Fork River Remove contaminated sediments Construct a new, natural channel for the riverRESTORATION
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“The Big Blackfoot” and the Clark Fork Rivers “We lived at the junction of great trout streams in Western Montana…” Norman MacLean (1902-1990)
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Restoration Artwork courtesy of Clark Fork Coalition
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Before
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During Construction
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Four Years After
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Opportunity : Where the Waste Is
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QUESTIONS?
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